Proposed regulation would require expats to speak
Indonesian or stay away
In a move
that appears aimed at the numbers of Chinese mainlanders flooding into
Indonesia’s industrial sector but that will likely sideswipe foreign and local
investors, the government is poised to mandate that all expatriate work permit
holders be forced to learn Indonesian as a foreign language.
The early drafts of the new
rules – which have not been formally introduced – state that foreigners must be proficient in Indonesian before
work permits will be issued. Later drafts seem to indicate some
flexibility, but companies are worried that even vital senior executives, who
rotate through head offices on three to four year tours, could be at risk.
Korean, Japanese, American
and European business chambers have all been buzzing over this latest
manifestation of economic nationalism. It is unclear if the country’s Manpower
Ministry will relent, although one recent version of the new rules indicates
that there may be a grace period to allow expats already in the country to brush
up their Bahasa Indonesia before facing a formal test. Foreign business
associations have been given no input into the new rules but a handful of local
business leaders have been consulted.
Given rapid economic growth
and a problematic educational system, local companies are often as reliant on
expats as foreign firms. Retail supply chains, logistic operations, engineering
departments and other out-of-sight aspects of local conglomerates are often run
by foreign experts.
Fear of the Chinese
The chief villains being
cited by officials are illegal Chinese workers. In the wake of the Asian
Financial Crisis in 1997 and 1998, most foreign investors fled Indonesia except
for Chinese companies, many of which won infrastructure tenders on a wave of
cheap financing. As commodity prices subsequently took off, more Chinese
companies entered, taking a strong interest in the country’s growing economy
and natural resources.
This has discomfited some
Indonesians, many of whom have never been comfortable with the prosperous
Chinese-Indonesian minority in the first place, since they tend to command the
country's economic heights. Tens of thousands of ethnic Chinese were
slaughtered in the anti-communist purges that followed a failed 1965 coup.
Those events brought to power the strongman Suharto, who used ethnic Chinese
economic strength to build the economy while banning the Chinese language and
forcing most Chinese to take Islamic names. Later, ethnic Chinese Indonesians
felt the brunt of the violence that swept the country when Suharto fell after
32 years at the top.
The new proposed manpower
regulations and other measures that are seen to target expatriates are largely
aimed at growing numbers of mainland Chinese workers, many of whom are believed
to be in the country illegally. Existing laws would bar these workers but
enforcement is spotty and bribes to look the other way are common.
ASEAN worries
The measures being proposed
are also considered to be aimed at the late 2015 onset of the ASEAN Economic
Community [AEC], which envisions an integrated ASEAN economy including the free
flow of skilled workers and capital throughout the 10-country region.
According to a joint study by the International Labour Organization (ILO) and
Asian Development Bank (ADB) in 2014, the AEC could generate some 14
million jobs by 2025, and improve the livelihood of the 600 million people
in ASEAN.
The study shows that there
will be significant wage and productivity gaps after the implementation, with
the wages of skilled workers likely to benefit most. However, skill
mismatches are likely to worsen with more than half of the high-skill jobs
available being filled by under-qualified workers, highlighting the importance
of improving the quality and relevance of education and training to meet industry
requirements, which is high on the to-do list of the Indonesian government
under President Joko Widodo. Many Indonesian officials and business leaders
fear that the country is unprepared to face the coming competition under the
AEC and the response has been to seek non-tariff measures to slow down the
impact.
Expanding rules
The decree regarding the
use of foreign workers amends a 2008 regulation stipulating that “the ability
to communicate in Indonesian shall be in accordance with the skills required
for the relevant position,” and that if the foreign workers are unable to meet
the required standard they will have to take language training.
“We hope that the
revision can be complete in February so we can immediately implement the
Indonesian language skill test for foreign workers who wish to work in
Indonesia,” Minister Hanif Dhakiri was quoted as saying by the state-run Antara
news agency. The new regulation is to add a formal test and standards being
developed by the University of Indonesia.
He added the government
would tighten various regulations concerning expatriate workers in Indonesia
and ensure their enforcement in order to protect the local workforce from
an influx of foreign newcomers seeking jobs in Indonesia.
According to data from the
Manpower Ministry, as of October 2014, 64,604 foreign workers were registered
in Indonesia, a decline from 68,957 in 2013 and 72,427 in 2012. The largest
number of workers – more than 15,000, are overseas Chinese, followed by
Japanese (10,183), South Koreans (7,678), Indians (4,680), Malaysians (3,779)
and Americans (2,497).
The regulations can be
traced to a higher law in Indonesia which pertains to certain provisions of the
National Language, Flag, Coat of Arms and Anthem. While the regulation focuses
on the promotion and protection of the Indonesian language and literature, it
introduces a potentially significant requirement for expatriate workers in
Indonesia to have sufficient knowledge of Indonesian to satisfy standards to be
set by the Minister of Education.
The provision is not the
first to require knowledge of the Indonesian language for expatriate employees;
the same kind of regulation is stipulated by the Minister of Energy and Mineral
Resources for the oil and gas industry. However, in both cases, the level
of proficiency required is confined to “the ability to communicate in Bahasa
Indonesia,” with the sanctions unclear if foreign workers fail to meet these
requirements.
In its defense, the
Indonesian government pointed out that similar strategies have often been used
in the past to circumvent the principle of free movement of labor in the
European Union.
"Like other countries,
Indonesia makes policies not to bar foreigners from entering, working, or
studying in Indonesia, but to facilitate their entry so that their stay gives
mutual benefit for the country and the foreigners themselves," Mudjiman,
the chairman of the National Commission for Standardization of Professions,
told local media.
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